The Spectator
10 May 2014 Aus
The luckiest kids in history
The statistics speak for themselves. Today’s gilded generation is the most blessed that ever lived
Australia
It don’t come easy
‘Got to pay your dues, if you wanna sing the blues,’ sang Ringo Starr wistfully after the demise of the…
Australian Columnists
Australian Notes
You really have to go to Washington DC to see the decline and fall of the United States or at…
Brown Study
I devoted most of last weekend to attending the conference of the Institute of Arbitrators and Mediators Australia in Canberra.…
Diary
I knew from reading his book that Bob Carr was colossally vain. But still I’m stunned when, 90 seconds before…
Australian Features
Offending Mother Russia
Criticising Putin’s military incursion in Ukraine does not,contrary to a stifling new consensus, amount to racism
A wicked orthodoxy
Global-warming alarmism has become a substitute religion, attended by all the intolerant zealotry that has so often marred religion in the past
Features
The luckiest kids in history
The statistics speak for themselves. This is a gilded generation
Liberté, égalité, austérité
Hollande’s ‘new start for Europe’ turned out rather like the old one
The wisdom of clouds
The guru of self-guided learning on teaching in prisons and the future of exams
Women against the vote
Perhaps not – it was the suffragettes’ female opponents who asked for a referendum to check. But it’s easier for us to forget that
The triumph of the bores
Being boring was once the worst of all social sins. Now it’s practically compulsory
The Himalayas
As the aircraft descends into the high altitude military airport at Leh, the first glimpse of the Himalayan Kingdom of…
The Week
The radical centre
Ed Miliband isn’t afraid to articulate his ideas. David Cameron’s have the advantage of being right. So why won’t he talk about them?
Portrait of the week
Home AstraZeneca’s board rejected an increased takeover bid of £63 billion by Pfizer. Commenting on the bid in Parliament, Vince…
Columnists
With Paxman gone, there are even fewer reasons to like the BBC
I suppose he’ll be replaced with someone who is nicer to politicians. It’s a shame
Power really does corrupt: here’s scientific proof
The real problem isn't inequality of wealth, it's inequality of behaviour
Pfizer’s boss is winning the spin game while Miliband is losing all credibility
Plus: Our state-owned railways, and the great Chinese cheese war
Books
God save England
A review of Some Desperate Glory: The First World War the Poets Knew, by Max Egremont. This chronological anthology puts the spotlight on the poets' patriotism
How to read well
A review of How to be Well Read, by John Sutherland. The occasional drift from accuracy shows that Sutherland is both well read and reads well, argues Christopher Howse
Gently does it
A review of The Ten Thousand Things, by John Spurling. This intricately wrought study of medieval Chinese scholar-artists is wonderfully well imagined
Botched Italian job
A review of Target: Italy, by Roderick Bailey. Whatever their deficiencies on the battlefield the Italian secret service outwitted British Intelligence during the second world war
Led a merry dance
A review of The Disinherited: A Story of Love, Family and Betrayal, by Robert Sackville-West. This biography of the famous family does not end well
Not for the squeamish
A review of A Curious Career, by Lynn Barber, and An Encyclopaedia of Myself, by Jonathan Meades. Two biographies to delight a dandy
Portrait of the artist
An extract from Three Lives of Dylan Thomas by Hilly Janes, which recalls her father’s friendship with the poet
A noble cause
I supported Australia’s Vietnam commitment in the decade between 1965 (when the Menzies Coalition government deployed combat forces to South…
Arts
Musical youth
Michael Henderson talks to the country opera house’s fresh-faced new music director
Spring round-up
The loopy line of Jankel Adler, the prints of Norman Stevens, the lucid dreams of Mick Rooney and the paintings of Alan Davie and Brian Horton
Master of melancholy
A Pas de Calais honours artist who refused to be labeled - and suffered the consequences
Tangled up in blue
Plus: Debris at the Southwark Playhouse attempts to produce heightened drama from murderous squalor – and fails
Not guilty
Where Marcus Berkmann commits professional suicide and admits he likes Abba – and Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan
Oedipus wrecks
Thebans, a new ENO opera by Frank McGuinness and Julian Anderson, is short on conviction – and interest
Out of the ordinary
Though his head is encased in papier mache, Michael Fassbender is wondrously expressive in this biopic of Frank Sidebottom
Watching the clock
Don’t let London suburbia throw you. This new series of the hyperactive American cop drama, 24, starring Kiefer Sutherland, is as thrilling as ever
Bedtime stories
When Radio 4 gets it right, the consolation of a great story, beautifully told, lulling the mind into sleep cannot be bettered
Domestic harmony
You’ll see nothing ‘cream and green and cosy’ in this spiky, gutsy and playful recreation of postwar interiors from Pangolin London
Life
No. 313
White to play. This position is from Tal-Smyslov, Candidates Tournament 1959. White’s next move was a bombshell which led to…
The write stuff
In Competition No. 2846 you were invited to invent the six rules for writing of a well-known author of your…
2161: Appellation contrôlée
The unclued lights (one doubly hyphened) share a medical similarity. (Despite appearances there are no rude words in the puzzle!)…
to 2158: Late bloomers
The unclued lights are the surnames of people (nine of whom were botanists) who gave their names to flowers. …
Making myselfherd
The more avid a support I’ve become, the more pain the Super Hoops have caused me
A land of extremes
The Brendan Eich case proves US politics is just too absurd. And you’ll soon be able to buy a Mustang over here































































